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My daughter is in year five and is struggling to keep up with her class, she suffers from anxiety and finds it hard to ask for help especially in a classroom situation and even more so with people she has never meet before, after ALOT of convincing we finally reached out to get a tutor. Eazymath Tutoring made the whole experience really great and easy, The tutor she was assigned was exactly what my daughter needed. Super friendly, caring, patient, nurturing and understanding. My daughter is happy to continue with her tutoring and the future is looking alot brighter for her. Thank you EzyMath TutoringConsumer, Albion Park
Year 9 student Molly worked through converting between km/hr and m/s using proportionality, and practiced applying constants to real-life speed questions.
For Year 10, Adeel focused on financial maths by solving simple interest problems and marked homework on quadratic graphing, also introducing the basics of exponential functions.
Meanwhile, Year 11 student Laaibah revised critical path analysis in Networks, including drawing activity networks from tables and calculating earliest start/finish times for assessment preparation.
A Year 12 student working through HSC finance and networks struggled with consistently setting out calculations; as a tutor observed, "writing down steps in solving harder questions" was often skipped, especially on multi-mark problems. This meant marks were lost even when the method was understood.
In Year 9 algebra, another student hesitated to annotate questions or show all working, making it difficult to trace errors during review—this led to confusion when revisiting worksheets.
Meanwhile, a Year 4 student tackling multiplication relied heavily on number charts rather than memory, slowing progress during timed tasks and increasing frustration mid-lesson.
A tutor in Albion Park recently saw a Year 11 student who had previously hesitated to show working out now consistently writes each step when simplifying ratios, making her reasoning much clearer.
In another session, a high schooler who used to struggle with independent problem-solving completed multiple questions without prompts, demonstrating real growth in self-reliance.
Meanwhile, an upper primary student who once relied on guesswork has begun asking for clarification whenever unsure about a formula—this shift has helped her accurately find the area and volume of shapes during lessons.